Newspaper Page Text
Toccoa News
TOCCOA, GA. JULY 4 1891.
RAtES OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One year in advance 11.00
aix months.... ' lO
jfhree months. » » • • • 30
Subacriptionc paid in Advance.
Send looney Order, Postal Note or
a»ft. Address,
The Toccoa News,
Toccoa, Ga.
Parnell and Mrs. O’Shea are ’said
to be very happy since their mar-
riage. Now] p that he has atoned
for'his escapade of stealing away
another man’s wife, he expects to re¬
Ineir'fight gain his leadership of the Irish in
for their rights.
• * *
Mr. Charles S. Kingsberry has
been appointed permanent receiver
for Stephen A. Ryan and will dispose
of the goods to the best advantage
possible. This Ryan failure is un¬
doubtedly one of the most gigantic
Steals ever known in the 30uth.
# * *
The Standard Oil Company" is not
fi^tisfied with owning the oil trade on
this continent, but it is negotiating
to get a controlling interosi in the
contihent of Europe. Next it will
reach out over Asia, arid will not be
Satisfied till it grasps andjowns the
whole world.
* * *
Gold continues to go out of this
country to Europe, Some fear if the
free coinage silver bill is passed,gold
will entirely leave this country, we
will be'flooded with silver dumped
in from all parts of the world. It is
^uite likely however that the expor¬
tations of the productions of this
country will increase from year to
year, much of which will be paid for
in gold, thus keeping us abundantly
supplied.
* * *
The yield of cotton in this region
is by no means promising. While
aome fields are looking well, indica¬
tions now are that the crops will be
short from i' third to a half. Corn is
looking fairly well, but the acreage
is not large. The farmers are earn¬
estly urged to plant largely of food
making crops; such as turnips, pota¬
toes, peas and beans. Everything
that can be raised will be needed for
food for the family and stock, and a
surplus to sell will be a great help
when fall and winter comes.
* * *
Prince George of Greece has been
passing through this country this
weak incognito. He thinks being
interviewed by newspaper reporters is
a.peculiar cust orn which he doesn’t
like very well. He is the son of the
king of Greece, a Lieutenant in the
riavy and has charge of thirty two
torpedo boats. Recently he and the
Russian Grand Duke were making a
tour of the world together. While in
Tokio, Japan, he saved tli9 life of
the heir to the Russian throne, from
an assassin who raised h*.s sword with
both hands above his head, and
brought it down with all his nvght
on the Grand Duke, cutting an ugly
gash in his scalp from near the crown
of his head to just over the right eye;
then the sabre swung again and once
more the Grand Duke was cut in
nearly the same place. The Russian
heir then fled followed by the assas¬
sin. Prince George rushed after
them, and as the sword was raised
again, he rapped the scoundrel on
the head, and brought him to the
ground and thus saved the life of the
Euij.eror of Russia. The prince is
22 years old. He is a brave lad, but
when attacked by uewspaper report¬
ers he yields submissively.
COUNTY ALLIANCE MEE TING .
The Haborshatn County Alliance
met at Clarksville on Thursday July
2nd, There was a large attendance
from all parts of the county.
President A. R. Jarrett was called
away to visit a sick patient, and Vice
President Warner presided.
Prominent among the resolutions,
was ooe endorsing Representative
Phillips as faithfu’ly discharging his
duties as member of the legislature;
one recommending the purchase of a
poor house farm; and one accepting
the invitation of the Mayor andCouu-
ctl of Toccoa to hold the Alliance
meeting in this city on August 5th.
which is to be addresed by President
Livingston*
The following officers were elected:
Dr. A. R, Jarrett, President.
T. J. Gastley r Vice-President.
W. W. Kolloek, Secretary.
T. J. Loggins, Treasurer.
A fuller account of the meeting is
crowded out this week.
Some of Buffalo Bill’s Indians are
s&k in England,
GRAND RALLY OF ALLIANCE-
MEN.
There will l»e a meeting of the Al-
liericeVnen ofc Habersham, Franklin
and adjacent counties in ToccoaAug-
ust 6th at which
President Livingston
will be present and address themeet-
ing.
Allmicemen everywhere are invi-
ted to be present.
Let there l.e the hiooest and most)
enthusiastic meeting ever held in
North Georgia; everybody turn out
and have a grand rally.
A DRAMATIC INCIDENT.
The slave d**alers’extend their ac¬
tivity even to the very doors of Bis¬
kra, the headquarters of the order of
the Warrior Monks of theSahara, and
one of the most dramatic features of
the consecration of the monks was
when Cardinal Lavigerie led to the
altar a little brown girl, barely nine
years old,who had succeeded in con-
cealing ”, herself and in effecting B her
escape from a slave , caravan pasting .
through the desert a few miles south
of Biskra. A sudden movement of
the child caused her to drop some¬
thing that she was holding concealed
beneath the fold cf her djebba. The
venerable prelate bent down and
raised it from the ground.
It was a small, dusky hand—the
hand of the little girl who stood be¬
sides him, and which in sheer wanton
cruelty had been cut off by her cip-
tors. Holding it aloft, and pointing
it southward toward the great Saha-
ra, while with his own hand he raised
the child’s j i that all
arm, so present
could see the mangled slump,the car¬
dinal exclaimed,in tones which seem¬
ed to ring forth as a claiioti: ‘*1
would to God that all Europe could
see this little hand! May it serve o
direct jour line of march. En avant
for God, for France and for humani¬
ty!”—Harper’s Weekly.
Wagg—1 can fully sympathize
with Tennysoil and Dr. Holmes and
the rest of those people who are bored
to death by autograph fiends. A fel¬
low bothered mo half an hour to-day
for my autograph.
Wooden—I itant to know!
Wagg—Yes, and the worst part
was, that he already had one of my
autographs which I gave him seme
time ago; but he wanted to change it
for a new one.
Wooden—JEhy, how absurd! What
reason did he give?
Wagg—Well, ho said he was tired
of the old one on the note, and he
would like a new one on a check.—
Boston Courier.
REACHED THE LIMIT.
The following, according to VheAr-
kansaw Traveler,is the origin of a fa¬
mous Kentucky feud.
Col. Pepperson stopped Col. Bran
in the road and told him if he had
any nerve he would screly be aveng¬
ed upon the Culiertons.
‘What have they done?*Bran asked.
‘Why, in Winchester this morning
one of them shot and severely wound¬
ed your son Ike, and I suppose,”said
Pepperson, “that you will* declare
war on the whole f^ang,”
“No; I can’t say that I will. You
see, I believe wo are altogether too
rash in taking up quarrels. How did
the quarrel come up?”
“Why, a party of fellows were
standing arouud, and some remark
was made about fast horses, when Jo
Cullerton said that your bay mare
was the most overrated horse in Ken¬
tucky, and”-
“What!” exclaimed Col.Bran. K Did
he say that? If he did, that settles
it. Hanged if I can stand every¬
thing! I’ll shoot the scoundrel.”
The man who jabbers in a way
Particularly flat
Tis now the proper slang to say
Is talkiug through his hat.
—Chicago Tribune.
There arc thirteen thousand differ¬
ent kinds of postage stamp? m tlib
world.
A Gadsden count)-, Fla., farmer is
45 years old, yet he is the proud
farther of thirty-two* &ne, healthy
children.
The longest word in the Winne¬
bago language is: ShoUkhatarakizan-
homkonkeinena. It means: “1 wilf
give you a horse.”
The large steam plow that was
started up in China, Cal., lately will
run day and night, and will plow six¬
ty acres every twenty-four Wurs.
Bulfinch—Well, Wooden,' ofd man,
I beard you are parried.’
Wooden—Yee, been married six
weeks. t
Bulfinch—Why, always I * thought you?
were a perfect woman hater.
JVooden—I am,
---
Cornell won the eight oared race I
on the Thames,
Toocoa’s Frefe Schools.
Ju™ 25th the citizens met pursuant
to adjournment to receive the report
of the Committee appointed to draft
the Bill to establish a system of pub-
lie « •
schools in Toccoa; several , ladies .
were present showing they / were
teresti-l in . the , cause of , education. .•
L. r. Cook Kaq. preside I and
Louis Davis was appointed accioUry.
Mr. Uavis read the report of tbeCom
>•>'«« which was adopted bv aectioas.
the Bill empowers the J/ayor and
Counci! to levy and collect a tax for
the support of public schools in Toe-
coa, and directs the County School
Commissioner to pay over to the city
Board of Education such prorata part
of tile state school funds as the town
is entitled to,
Sec. 1st. enacts that a system of
Public Schools may be established
and maintained in Toccoa City.
Sec. 2nd. directs that an election
shall be held on a day appointed by
the Mayor and Council, on the ques¬
tion of local taxation for s-iid Public
Schools: at the election the ballots
sl 'all read: *‘Ftw 1 ublic Schools,
and “Against l unite Schools; if two
thirdg of the q „ ft]ifie i voters of the
t ow „ vote ‘ For Public Schoo’s,’-’ t'- e
Bill becomes a law an 1 the J/ayor
and Council shall raise annually by
taxation a sum sufficient to support
the schools.
Sec. 31. creates a Board of Educa¬
tion, to consist of six members, each
to hold office three years; two to go
out each year and two new ones
elected by the people in their places.
The following were eleete-i at this
meeting: Haves, W. R. hrnce, T. A. Capps,
W. J /eff Davis, Louis Da¬
vis and II. M. Payne.
See. 4th. makes this Board a body
corporate to legally transact business.
Sec. 5th. empowers the Board to
employ teachers, fit their salaries;
prescribe courses of study, and make
all rules and regulations necessary for
properly conducting the schools.
Sec. 6th. defines the duties of the
officers of the Board.
c. 7tl». enacts that the school
shill be free to all children Residing
within the corporate limits of Toccoa
City; the children of non-residents
may be admitted upon such terms ns
may be prescribed by the Board.
Sec. 8th. directs that separate
schools shall be j rovided for white
and colored children.
The other sections relate to details
including graded sc! ools, and that
within fifteen days after the ratifica¬
tion of the passage of this act, an
election must be held in this city to
decide whether this syoteir of Free
Schools will be established or n >t.
NEW YORK LE ITER.
The resistance of the air while a
train of cars is running at a high rate
of speed is a subject which has long
engaged the attention of inventors,
but so far without much success
Master Mechanic Buchanan, of the
Vanderbilt lines, has been at work on
the problem for a long time and is
now getting his ideas into shape. He
is experimenting with a steel coa h
with both ends shapped something
like a ship's prow. lie wants his cars
lighter and his engines heavier, for
greater speed. He believes a steel
cover can be arranged on an engine
so ill at the air cannot eddy around tlie
cab and the boilers.The whole scheme
would be on the line of the least pos
sible resistance to tlie atmosphere.'
Mr. Buehana believes that something
of this sort will have to be adopted
before long, and that the railroad
trains of the future will make 75 or
eighty miles an hour between this
city and Chicago.
The outrageous manner in which a
hospital patient was sent., while suf¬
fering from a high. fever| from one
hospital to another, there to die next
day, has aroused the public to a vig¬
orous protest against any such pro
ceedings in the future. Some of the
young doctors in these hospitals ex¬
hibit a total lack of judgement and
humanity which iu this case was sim¬
ply murderous. This poor woman
while very sick wa* jolte 1 over three
miles of pavement* so that her death
would not be recorded as taking
place in the hospital where she was
being treated/ With proper treat
men! there is no doubt that her life
could have berr/ sayed. Ihstcacl of
this however she was unnecessarily
buhdl&i otr to Bellvue, and when her
husband called to see her nbxt dav
she was deal.' The man responsible
for such conduct should be indicted
for manslaughter and an example
suould be made’ for all futufe time.
Ecw * A h
I>- RLINGTO
“1 thinkj” said a fond Texas par'ent,
•‘that Tommy is gbing to be a poet
when’he grows up. Ho doesn’t eat,
and sits by the stove all day and
thinks and thinks.”
“You had better grease him
over. He is going to have V:e meas¬
les,and if you grease hi in they wifi
break out all over him, and then he
will feel better.”—Texas Siftings.
British subjests have been prohib-
eted from catching seals ia Behring
sea before May L1892.
A TURTLE EGG STORY.
Qn Sa , ai<1 the the htj _
te , 0 „ 0 rm91ul B.ach, Fu saw a
, turl|e crawH out of
”
the , breakers . , . front . of . the , hotel,and . ,
in .
making ... its and ,
way to near the , front ,
. At . the
steps. r discovery all „ . hands
«»1W. »h° kept perfectly qu.et
r! ' urt e cunpleted her ueM,
*" J h J 80 <• "> “» SI
lnterest, "q °l» r, '-‘ ul1 o tort e e««
huoluio without the trouble of walk-
ln iy Wal>' e miles,
1 * urt ^ e » after going as far away
Rom the water as she thinks is safe
to l* er without beig disturbed
by the sea during the necessary time
of being hatched by the natural heat
of the sand in which she buries them,
begins her operation by first scoop-
ing out a place in the sand large
enough for th6 accommodation of
body, then with her land flippers
a hole about ten inches in
ana about twelve inches deep, throw¬
ing the sand out on both side* of her
bed; then wnen ready with all the
necessary preparation,she begins lay¬
ing her eggs into this hole. On fin¬
ishing her task she covers up the eggs
with sand by means of her hind flaps,
and the quietly crawls back again t<»
her natural element—the Atlantic
Ocean—anu leaves her eggs to good
luck, either to be hatched, which
takes sixty days, or to the turtle egg
hunter to rob the nest during the
night she laid them.
All the above interesting process
was witnessed By about 49 persons,
the Professor among them, he taking
particular interest in observing the
tune it took from the beginning of
making the nest until completing the
the covering of the eggs, which he
found to have been m this case ex¬
actly 1 hour and 20 minutes, the tur¬
tle having deposited 175 eggs; but
the funniest part of the show was that
the poor turtle was cheated out of de¬
positing her fruit in the nest by Mine
Host Vining laying flat down behind
the turtle and taking the eggs from
her as fast as she layml them, and
putting them into a bucket for next
morning’s consumption at the break¬
fast table in the shape of turtle egg
muffins, which were eujoye 1 by all
those who witnessed this most inter¬
esting operation. Now it will be
wondered at that the turtle perform-
e l her duty without being disturbed
by the by-standers. This is one of
the peculiarities of this fb/imal; that
she never allows herself to be fright¬
ened off after she once begins to lay
her eggs.—Palatka Times.
TIIE FIRST STEP.
sleep, Perhaps you are run down, can’t eat, can’t,
cant think, can’t do anythin? to your
satisfaction, and y.m w aider what ails yo i.
You should heed the warning, you are talon;'
the first ste > into Nervo is Pr s ration. You
need a N'erve To lie and in Etc trie Bitters
you will find the exact remedy for restoring
your idition. nervous syste n to it- normal, healthy
eo of this greaf Surprising Nerve Tonic resvlts ainf.Alterative follow tiie use
appetite .Your
returns, aood d gestion is restored,
and the Liver and Kidneys re-ume -healthy
action. Try a 1) >ttle. Priee 50c alt’ V7 II & J
Davis’s drug store.
An Advertising Idaa.
Albion (N. Y.) American/
) O O (
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'I
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,—O—s
OB®. «
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7his nian always had hD advertis¬
ing done by people who could do it
cheaper than anybody else could af¬
ford, an l that’s the way he got
skinned!
Indians on the Navayo reservation
have become so troubles*mie that three
troops of cavalry have been sent there
Cap. Joe Gerner of the Nicaragua
Canal Construction Co.y' arrived in
New Fork on the Santuit Sau eJuan
del Norte.
Insurgents in Cataraarca,- Argen^
Line Republic, have over throwrn the
home government. The causes of
the revolution were local.
Justin MeCarthey is expected to
retire from the leadership of the Irish
party when John D.lloo is relea«d
from prison.
English authors are annoyed by
PresUont HarrUoa’s delay in procla-
tnlng that England is entitled to tiie
benefits of the new American copy-
right law.
Few American tourists are now in
ItaW and tradesmen are coin planing
of tiie losses suffered through the di-
verting of Americau travel to other
Some lives wei« lost in the
floods,
Snider on Ekouses
You never he&r a good man com¬
plaining or rendering excuses for
what he does; be just goes along,pur¬
suing the even tenor of his ways,if be
lias any misfortune he never enlists as
much sympathy as others that go
along in a kind of rough and tumble
way. ltut did you ever kaow a man
to do wrong but what he rendered
some excuse for doing the wrong? I
knew a man once that let the weeds
and grass so overcome his crops ;he
m ide a failure; when asked why he
did not wrrk it, he tendered an ex-
*
cusc that the gnats were so bad in
the morning and evening he could
not work tor them and the sun was
too Hot at noon.
asIt the man given to profanity
why he is thus; he tel!s you he fo til¬
ed the habit from his associates,
Ask the man given to intoxication
for a reason. He either tells you
inherited it from his ancestors or lie
imbibed a thirst for it by drinking a
little, or taking it on a prescription
as a medicine from his physician.
Ask the man who makes his living
otherwise thari by honesty, and lie is
ready to give a reason by way of
excuse.
I knew a minister once who got the
advantage in a horse trade by tellnm
a falsehood ; When called <;n by his
church for a reason, his excuse was he
only told a little necessary story and
on this he tried to justify himself.
So it goes all along down the line;
a man that docs wrong always has an
excuse, but why should we find fault
with such? They only inherited the
evil from their fpie-parents*. Mother
Eve gave birth to excuses when call¬
ed on for a reason in eating the fruit
she was told not to eat, and Father
Adam when called on comes up and
acknowledges the fatherhood of excu¬
ses, >‘The woman gave to me and 1 did
eat.”
So it. has 1 een handed down by ins
hcritance from generation to genera¬
tion until it has reached the present
time.
But tt does not. go Without saying
that each succeeding generation lias
improved on the excuse# rendered by
our foreparerfts.
The) told an uunmtakab'e truth in
their excuse; but the man who lost
his cr q> by letting it be ehoked by
tlie weeds and gt'a>s was net hindered
much by the botheration ot the
g^ats a,J d prest-urc of the heat ot
the sun, as by downright laz.uess and
lie lies.
The pi earhi r vlio told the nece-sa-
ry story ns he claimed it, Was not so
much a necessity as he was possess¬
ed wim a spirit cf unfair dealing
with tiio fallow men. lie was disposed
to take advantage of the man and in
ord r to do so, he wilfu ly lied.
I conclude a grea^ many schools
are being taught in the art of excu-
s s ‘aim lying whose instruction-*
originate from Sat: n and given out
through the pnfenls to their children;
before the parents are aware of the
faet that they are thus empoiyed as
the tutors of their own children by
the devil*, many of them become
graduates and are adepts in tiie a<t.
As an example, a child is told to
perform a certa-u thing and it does
not suit its taste, it disobeys and
make’s the false excuse: “I cant.”
Ehis word ‘I can't,’ when learned by
a child,'has more to do in impeding
his growth to perfect manhood in
performing the real duties of this
life thar/any other word in the vo¬
cabulary.
I wot Id suggest a little change, ir.
l.eu of the word “I can’t; ’ let them
learn tlie word, ‘I’ll try and keep
on trying and my word for it, there
will tie less crime and more manhood
and womanhood on the perfect line
in the next decade of years than there
has been for the p.»st three decades.
Joe Snider.
A LITTLE GIRL S EXPERIENCE IN A
LIGHTHOUSE.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Trescott are keepers of
the Government and blessed Lighthouse wi.h at daughter Sand Beach, four
Mich, are a
years old.. Last April she wus taken down
with Measles, followed with a dreadful Cough
aud'turniitg’into Detroit treated a Fever, Doctors at home
and at her, but in vain, she
grew' *‘h tndftti WO*se **# rapidly, hones.”—Then until she she was tried a mere Dr.
King’s New Discovers and after 'lie use of two
a id a h ilt bcttl* s, w> s oomp’etely cured.
They say Dr. King’s New Discovery is wor.h
its weight in gold, yet yoircan get a trial bot-
t e free at W H &J Davis’s Drugstore.
_ ___ ____ _ ___
General Di Fonseca, President
of Brazil, will shortly pay a' vwit to
Europe,
Ottawa University has conferred
the title of Doctor of Law. on H»m«
Frahci* Eagan,^ formely editor New
Torlf,^reeman s Journal.
® 1 gJ“ ! ' ’ uf
he t
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum
f ev -» r .sores, tetter,, chapped hands
chilblains, coins and all skin erupt
i ot,s and .positively cures P-l.ea, pr
P a V reapired. It ia guarc... ce o
give fteefect satisfaction or roan,ey iur re-
fen-M- ,{*>« *« K er bux -
b*.W- H. & J. Uavis. . ,.
The many gifts to dale Cldlege
last year exceeded |150,000,000,
CO 1*0 J B SIMMON'S
NEW FURNITURE STOR 7 ,
for fine \\ alnut, Cherry and Oak Bed Room Suits. Also fine Chairs',
Tables, Window Shades and Lace Curtains.
O O * ) () U O O 0 () Q O O o O O o O 0
I FURNITURE OF ALL KINDS I
O o O o o O O O O O <> O <> o O oO D °
He also carries a large stock of Medium Grade Furniture sui h as
Bureaus, Bed Steads, Safes, &c. SpeciaiPrices will be given for
Cash.
ft * » v ®*IP T T ‘T* $7 mi Ate* "H
TOCCOA, DA
MACHINERY SUPPLIES
Fittings for ENGINES and Mil LS inctliding BELTING amlOIL.
REPAIR SHOP. Wo make a Special tv of repairing all kinds of Mn
cbj \ero. We handle the Improved Wheeler and Wilson Sewing Machine, a so ilie
*
_
Famous Clayton Sewing Machine Motor j
**"**#* - ** ** **
which can be attached to anv machine. Tt drives the Sewing Machine, saviing the
ladies that laborious work, so injurious to health.
. j/. ,£■ .r. ir. th/si/a, loccoa, uv/,
Cftjjps '/ltd//. Schaefers Old Office,
■
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m m
A m
rail! iBlSI!!
i m Hi St
<r.
jflfBPi
Wmm -r-'* ■%$£zSjmEa& llpSilliliP? £2
£ again oj)er Ij tracte I fie Cefebraled
PRATT CrZMSS 3
?
At so the jfJroofis <(• 2 ay to? Press other wafers />/
Presses and Girs , and IPf/iny. Send /or Pric >
audaiyeyoiir orders early. P. -Ss/iaefer.
NEW TIN ^ REPAIR SHOP
[ have opened « shop tin* Repairing of old tin ware, sheet
iron and Copper S Oik, a (in iis, Pi^loU. Ij: mips, trunks am
Door Locks,' RaiasaK Umbrellas &e. 1 make the lepuiiine of
Cooktini Stoves a specialty ; cracks in the uvtn repair d, and
it mil c t<> cook as uood as a new strive. Stove* that fail to
draw and bake evenly, 1 guarantee to make b«ke and draw.
1 am also ai>ent l«>r Mu Lambert Evaporator,used lor dr\ing
Fruit, Veg< tallies and Berries. The Evuj orator is altuchnl
to any Cooking Sto\ e, and will pay for itself in three dav«.
Every ft mi I v should nave one. The Knit, and Y< getatihs
Evaporated retain tin ir origmil Flavor and Color, l.ring vonr
old tinware and have it made good as new at a finall cost.-
Shop at T. C. W light’s store. R spectfu.lv,
T T,LAWSON TOGCOA TA.
iclfeiL
A pamphlet of information aDd ab-
.straot of the laws, showing llitw toy
a. Obtain Marks, Patents, Cops Caveats, Traded
rights, sent /fee.
Ad drew MUNN A CO.A
361 Broadway, AM
New York.
a
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment.
A Cure for the Ailments of Man'
and Beast.
A long-tested pain reliever.
Its use is almost universal by the Housewife, the
Farmer, the Stock Raiser, and by every’ one
requiring an effective liniment.
No other application compares with it in efficacy.
This well-known remedy has stood the test of
years, almost generations.
No medicine chest is complete without a bottle o£
Mustang Liniment.
— Occasions arise for its use almost day. y.
every
All druggists and dealers have it
uni! mUllCT Mr:*
■ ■ ? ~ ■ ° n « ■»« *l» lb- rk. La.,-
We furnish everything-. " • !u ]..r».
We Hurt y,. u . N<. ri.k. T..u mil d«v<,:»
your .pare nit.ni.m., or all your time to ihe«,. r k. 1 bi» ;< in,
Beginners entirely new I.nd. intl brings wonderful tuern. to ever. >. o k.
are earning from £*i;5 to fiO r.
and more aftera little erperienee. We pipwrck tuxi nrwufiii.
can furnGIt von ibe euv-
lfei $3000 niter kVX, how tear A b YKAR v\ to iu any ho r ear Nn fairly stion,will n Iwrtv i wd ! nad I TLMiihkiiil wwk undertnke ^ fu.ru.n rhv, industrfousi) on(i Ih.lJtn to oi riiltt wh(
aril) ik irir f»wn lor«litir«,v. hs-rerer tiler lire.I will* teofunah
the stiam Um ore»»|-lv.y»„pnt^t * Li, I, h
^ Wo _ mo ' t»y ney f«*r for . iiic me krIw kki«m ful v.*„ «•«» that Niiount
learned. mad. 1 1 dvMrHmt desire'llut surer*, a* ab«ve. T-natiy and q.^tckly
already one one nrcsrker from »«e)i «R*iri* t eremur. I
nave tnctgjft aud }>rvvi(io<3 with emjdv
number, who are utahiu? v uirnt a ' jart's
d t PkW over a A<Mki.«,i£. It a X K W
K A.LLLA, r 1 «>- K.
*30, AtiuueUt, Kvine,